You Can Buy Pizza-Flavored Salad Dressing

On Monday, for reasons unbeknownst to me (let’s say for science), members of the NPR staff tried a pizza-flavored salad dressing.

Self-described humorists from NPR’s Wait, Wait…Don’t Tell Me! quiz show subjected their bodies to a flavor of Chef Kidd’s Funagrette. The salad dressing is meant to be a fun way to entice kids to eat salads, but literally sounds like the physical incarnation of regret.

Highlights of their heroic taste test include:

As a salad dressing, it’s gross. As a proof of concept for intravenous pizza, it’s promising. – Ian Chillag

This isn’t a way to get kids to like salad. It’s a way to get them to hate pizza. – Peter Sagal

The Honey Berry and Cocoa Berry Funagrettes sound palatable, but Lime Rickey (some sort of pirate disease vinaigrette, I’m assuming) and PB & J flavors also threaten to drench children’s salads.

You’ve been warned.

More content

CultureProducts
BuzzBallz Drops World Cup-Inspired ‘SoccerBallz’ Flavors
Just in time for the World Cup, BuzzBallz is hitting the pitch this summer with SoccerBallz, a limited-edition lineup of globally-inspired flavors. Crafted for the…
,
Products
OREO Drops Firecracker Pop Flavor Inspired By Classic Popsicles
OREO’s latest limited-edition flavor will surely bring back memories.  Called “Firecracker Pop,” it borrows the nostalgic flavor of those three-layered Fourth of July popsicles we…
,
CultureProducts
M&M’s Drops Cerulean Pack Inspired By The Devil Wears Prada
M&M’s is entering a fashion era with a new all-cerulean pack inspired by The Devil Wears Prada. The limited-edition drop is a nod to the…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox